Abstract
Ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM)-deficient lymphocytes exhibit defects in coding joint formation during V(D)J recombination in vitro. Similar defects in vivo should affect both T and B cell development, yet the lymphoid phenotypes of ATM deficiency are more pronounced in the T cell compartment. In this regard, ATM-deficient mice exhibit a preferential T lymphopenia and have an increased incidence of nontransformed and transformed T cells with T cell receptor α/δ locus translocations. We demonstrate that there is an increase in the accumulation of unrepaired coding ends during different steps of antigen receptor gene assembly at both the immunoglobulin and T cell receptor loci in developing ATM-deficient B and T lymphocytes. Furthermore, we show that the frequency of ATM-deficient αδ T cells with translocations involving the T cell receptor α/δ locus is directly related to the number of T cell receptor α rearrangements that these cells can make during development. Collectively, these findings demonstrate that ATM deficiency leads to broad defects in coding joint formation in developing B and T lymphocytes in vivo, and they provide a potential molecular explanation as to why the developmental impact of these defects could be more pronounced in the T cell compartment. JEM © The Rockefeller University Press.
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CITATION STYLE
Huang, C. Y., Sharma, G. G., Walker, L. M., Bassing, C. H., Pandita, T. K., & Sleckman, B. P. (2007). Defects in coding joint formation in vivo in developing ATM-deficient B and T lymphocytes. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 204(6), 1371–1381. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20061460
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